After months of negotiations, House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman James Comer (R-KY) is making it clear: Bill and Hillary Clinton are not above the law.
In a letter sent to longtime Clinton attorney David Kendall, Comer reiterated that the former president and former secretary of state must comply with lawfully issued subpoenas and appear for in-person depositions regarding the federal government’s handling of the Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell investigation.
Republicans and Democrats on the committee jointly approved subpoenas in July — acknowledging the Clintons’ longstanding association with the notorious sex trafficker and his criminal network.
“Further delays are unacceptable,” Comer declared. “Given their history with Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, any attempt by the Clintons to avoid sitting for a deposition would be in defiance of lawful subpoenas and grounds to initiate contempt of Congress proceedings.”
The committee has now publicly set the dates:
• Bill Clinton — December 17, 2025
• Hillary Clinton — December 18, 2025
These depositions mark the first time the Clintons will face direct questioning by Congress on their Epstein connections — which include Bill Clinton’s multiple documented flights aboard Epstein’s jet and the Clintons’ relationship with figures deeply involved in the scandal.
Comer emphasized that the purpose of the inquiry is serious and bipartisan: delivering transparency and accountability to Epstein’s survivors and to the American people.
The investigation also aims to expose failures within the federal government — particularly controversial non-prosecution agreements that allowed Epstein to evade justice for years while continuing to abuse minors.
If the Clintons continue stonewalling, the committee has the authority to escalate the matter, including contempt of Congress proceedings.
The message from Chairman Comer was unmistakable:
The days of political privilege shielding the Clintons from scrutiny are over.
With accountability long overdue, Americans will finally learn whether any powerful figures received protection while a sex-trafficking empire operated in plain sight.
The question now: Will the Clintons cooperate — or will they fight transparency yet again?
Read the letter to Bill and Hillary Clinton’s attorney, David Kendall, here.














